PowerPoint Presentation Materials to accompany Genetics: Analysis and Principles Robert J. Brooker CHAPTER 7 NON-MENDELIAN INHERITANCE Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display INTRODUCTION Mendelian inheritance patterns involve genes that Most genes in eukaryotic species follow a Mendelian pattern of inheritance Directly influence the outcome of an organism’s traits and Obey Mendel’s laws However, there are many that don’t Linkage can be considered as non-Mendelian inheritance Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-2 INTRODUCTION Patterns of inheritance that deviate from a Mendelian pattern: Maternal effect and epigenetic inheritance Involve genes in the nucleus Extranuclear inheritance Involves genes in organelles other than the nucleus Mitochondria Chloroplasts Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-3 7.1 MATERNAL EFFECT Maternal effect refers to an inheritance pattern for certain nuclear genes in which the genotype of the mother directly determines the phenotype of her offspring This phenomenon is due to the accumulation of gene products that the mother provides to her developing eggs Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-4 The first example of a maternal effect gene was discovered in the 1920s by A. E. Boycott He was studying morphological features of the water snail, Limnaea peregra In this species, the shell and internal organs can be arranged in one of two directions Right-handed (dextral) Left-handed (sinistral) The dextral orientation is more common and dominant The snail’s body plan curvature depends on the cleavage pattern of the egg immediately after fertilization Figure 7.1 describes Boycott’s experiment Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-5 Reciprocal cross A 3:1 phenotypic ratio would be predicted by a Mendelian pattern of inheritance Figure 7.1 7-6 Alfred Sturtevant later explained the incongruity with Mendelian inheritance Snail coiling is due to a maternal effect gene that exists as dextral (D) and sinistral (d) alelles The phenotype of the offspring depended solely on the genotype of the mother His conclusions were drawn from the inheritance patterns of the F2 and F3 generations Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-7 CO 7 Fig. 7.1(TE Art) Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Parental generation DD dd dd DD F1 generation Dd All dextral F2 generation Dd All sinistral Males and females 1 DD 2 Dd 1 dd All dextral Cross to each other F3 generation Males and females 3 dextral 1 sinistral Note that the phenotype of each generation depends on the maternal genotype of the previous generation DD or Dd mothers produce dextral offspring dd mothers produce sinistral offspring The phenotype of the progeny is determined by the mother’s genotype NOT phenotype The genotypes of the father and offspring do not affect the phenotype of the offspring Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-9 The gene products are a reflection of the genotype of the mother They are transported to the cytoplasm of the oocyte where they persist for a significant time after the egg has been fertilized Thus influencing the early developmental stages of the embryo Figure 7.2 7-11 D gene products cause egg cleavage that promotes a right-handed body plan Figure 7.2 7-12 d gene products cause egg cleavage that promotes a lefthanded body plan Even if the egg is fertilized by sperm carrying the D allele The sperm’s genotype is irrelevant because the expression of the sperm’s gene would be too late Figure 7.2 7-13 Maternal effect genes encode RNA or proteins that play important roles in the early steps of embryogenesis For example Cell division Cleavage pattern In Drosophila, geneticists have identified several dozen maternal effect genes These have profound effects on the early stages of development Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-14 7.2 EPIGENETIC INHERITANCE Epigenetic inheritance refers to a pattern in which a modification occurs to a nuclear gene or chromosome that alters gene expression However, the expression is not permanently changed over the course of many generations Epigenetic changes are caused by DNA and chromosomal modifications These can occur during oogenesis, spermatogenesis or early embryonic development Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-15 Dosage Compensation The purpose of dosage compensation is to offset differences in the number of active sex chromosomes Dosage compensation has been studied extensively in mammals, Drosophila and Caenorhabditis elegans Depending on the species, dosage compensation occurs via different mechanisms Refer to Table 7.1 Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-16 7-17 Fig. 7.3 Barr body is a highly condensed X chromosome The mechanism of X inactivation, also known as the Lyon hypothesis, is schematically illustrated in Figure 7.4 The example involves a white and black variegated coat color found in certain strains of mice A female mouse has inherited two X chromosomes One from its mother that carries an allele conferring white coat color (Xb) One from its father that carries an allele conferring black coat color (XB) Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-20 The epithelial cells derived from this embryonic cell will produce a patch of white fur At an early stage of embryonic development While those from this will produce a patch of black fur Figure 7.4 7-21 During X chromosome inactivation, the DNA becomes highly compacted Most genes on the inactivated X cannot be expressed When this inactivated X is replicated during cell division Both copies remain highly compacted and inactive In a similar fashion, X inactivation is passed along to all future somatic cells Another example of variegated coat color Is found in calico cats Refer to Figure 7.3b Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-22 The Lyon Hypothesis Put to the Test In 1963, Ronald Davidson, Harold Nitowsky and Barton Childs set out to test the Lyon hypothesis at the cellular level To do so they analyzed the expression of a human X-linked gene The gene encodes glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G-6-PD), an enzyme used in sugar metabolism Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-23 Biochemists had found that individuals vary with regards to the G-6-PD enzyme This variation can be detected when the enzyme is subjected to agarose gel electrophoresis One G-6-PD allele encodes an enzyme that migrates very quickly Another allele encodes an enzyme that migrates slowly The “fast” enzyme The “slow” enzyme The two types of enzymes have minor differences in their structures These do not significantly affect G-6-PD function Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-24 Figure 7.5 illustrates the mobility of G-6-PD proteins from various individuals Thus heterozygous adult females produce both types of enzymes Hemizygous males produce either the fast or the slow type Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-25 The Hypothesis According to the Lyon hypothesis, an adult female who is heterozygous for the fast and slow G-6-PD alleles should express only one of the two alleles in any particular somatic cell and its descendants, but not both Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-26 Figure 7.6 7-27 The Data Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-28 Interpreting the Data These epithelial cells were used to generate the nine clones (as described in steps 2 to 4) All nine clones expressed one of the two types of G-6-PD enzyme, not both Clones 2, 3, 5, 6, 9 & 10 expressed only the slow type Clones 4, 7 & 8 expressed only the fast type The heterozygous woman produced both types of G-6-PD enzymes Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-29 Interpreting the Data These results are consistent with the hypothesis that X inactivation has already occurred in any given epithelial cell AND This pattern of inactivation is passed to all of the cell’s progeny Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-30 Genomic Imprinting Genomic imprinting is a phenomenon in which expression of a gene depends on whether it is inherited from the male or the female parent Imprinted genes follow a non-Mendelian pattern of inheritance Depending on how the genes are “marked”, the offspring expresses either the maternally-inherited or the paternally-inherited allele Not both This is termed monoallelic expression Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-39 Let’s consider the following example in mice: The Igf-2 gene encodes a growth hormone called insulinlike growth factor 2 Imprinting results in the expression of the paternal but not the maternal allele A functional Igf-2 gene is necessary for a normal size The paternal allele is transcribed into RNA The maternal allele is not transcribed Igf-2m is a mutant allele that yields a defective protein This may cause a mouse to be dwarf depending on whether it inherits the mutant allele from its father or mother Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-40 Fig. 7.9 Cross: Homozygous normal male (Igf-2 Igf-2) X homozygous mutant female (Igf-2m Igf-2m) Offspring are heterozygous (Igf-2 Igf-2m) They have inherited an Igf-2 allele from their father This allele is expressed yielding a functional protein The mouse grows to a normal size Reciprocal cross: Homozygous mutant male (Igf-2m Igf-2m) X homozygous normal female (Igf-2 Igf-2) Offspring are heterozygous (Igf-2 Igf-2m) They have inherited an Igf-2m allele from their father This allele is expressed yielding a defective protein The mouse has a dwarf phenotype Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-41 At the cellular level, imprinting is an epigenetic process that can be divided into three stages 1. Establishment of the imprint during gametogenesis 2. Maintenance of the imprint during embryogenesis and in the adult somatic cells 3. Erasure and reestablishment of the imprint in the germ cells These stages are described in Figure 7.10 The example also considers the imprinting of the Igf-2 gene Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-42 Both male and female mice express the Igf-2 in their somatic cells Female mouse transmits transcriptionally inactive alleles Erasure and Reestablishment During gametogenesis, the imprint is erased; it is reestablished depending on the sex of the animal Male mouse transmits transcriptionally active alleles m m Transcribed into mRNA in the somatic cells of offspring; But yields defective proteins Figure 7.10 7-43 Genomic imprinting is permanent in somatic cells It may involve However, the marking of alleles can be altered from generation to generation A single gene A part of a chromosome An entire chromosome Even all the chromosomes from one parent Imprinting is the reason that parthenogenesis ("virgin birth") does not occur in mammals. Two complete female genomes cannot produce viable young because of the imprinted genes. Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-44 Genomic Imprinting Failure to inherit several nonimprinted genes on the father's chromosome #15 causes a human congenital disorder called Prader-Willi syndrome. Failure to inherit one nonimprinted gene (UBE3A) on the mother's chromosome #15 causes Angelman syndrome. Failure of imprinting in somatic cells may lead to cancer. The cancerous cells of a malignancy called Wilms´ tumor and many cases of colon cancer have both copies of the IGF2 gene expressed (where only one, the father's, should be). Reduced methylation — and hence increased expression — of proto-oncogenes can lead to cancer, while increased methylation — and hence decreased expression — of tumor suppressor genes can also do so. Imprinting and DNA Methylation Genomic imprinting must involve a marking process At the molecular level, the imprinting of several genes is known to involve differentially methylated regions (DMRs) These are located near the imprinted genes They are methylated either in the oocyte or sperm Not both They contain binding sites for one or more transcriptional factors Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-45 For most genes, methylation at a DMR results in inhibition of gene expression Methylation could Enhance the binding of proteins that inhibit transcription and/or Inhibit the binding of proteins that enhance transcription Because of this, imprinting is usually described as a process that silences gene expression by preventing transcription However, sometimes methylation activates specific genes Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-46 Let’s consider two imprinted genes in humans, H19 and Igf-2 They lie close to each other on human chromosome 11 Appear to be controlled by the same DMR This DMR Is ~ 2000 bp Contains binding sites for proteins that regulate the transcription of both genes Is highly methylated on the paternally inherited chromosome Methylation silences the H19 gene and activates the Igf-2 gene Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-47 Only binds to unmethylated DMR Only binds to methylated DMR Figure 7.11a H19 gene Igf-2 gene activated silenced H19 gene Igf-2 gene silenced activated Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-48 Example of methylation patterns in somatic cells and gametes of male and female offspring Maternal chromosome Paternal chromosome Female Offspring Haploid female gametes transmit an unmethylated DMR Maternal chromosome Paternal chromosome Male Offspring Haploid male gametes transmit a methylated DMR 7-49 To date, imprinting has been identified in dozens of mammalian genes However, the biological significance of genomic imprinting is still a matter of speculation Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-50 Imprinting does play a role in the inheritance of certain human diseases such as Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) and Angelman syndrome (AS) PWS is characterized by AS is characterized by Reduced motor function Obesity Mental deficiencies Hyperactivity Unusual seizures Repetitive symmetrical muscle movements Mental deficiencies Most commonly, PWS and AS involve a small deletion in chromosome 15 If it is inherited from the mother, it leads to AS If it is inherited from the father, it leads to PWS Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-51 Researchers have discovered that this region contains closely linked but distinct genes AS results from the lack of expression of a single gene, UBE3A These are maternally or paternally imprinted The gene is paternally imprinted (silenced) PWS results (most likely) from the lack of expression of a single gene, designated SNRNP The gene is maternally imprinted (silenced) Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-52 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Fig. 7.12(TE Art) 15 15 PW gene AS gene Deleted region that includes both the AS and the PW genes PW gene silenced in egg AS gene silenced in sperm PW AS PW AS PW AS Fertilized Fertilized egg egg PW AS Angelman syndrome Prader-Willi syndrome The offspring does not carry an active copy of the AS gene. The offspring does not carry an active copy of the PW gene Silenced allele Expressed allele 7.3 EXTRANUCLEAR INHERITANCE Extranuclear inheritance refers to inheritance patterns involving genetic material outside the nucleus The two most important examples: mitochondria and chloroplasts These organelles are found in the cytoplasm Extranuclear inheritance = cytoplasmic inheritance Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-54 The genetic material of mitochondria and chloroplasts is located in a region called the nucleoid Refer to Figure 7.13 The genome is composed of a single circular chromosome containing double-stranded DNA 7-55 In general, mitochondrial genomes are Fairly small in animals Intermediate in size in fungi, algae and protists Fairly large in plants Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-57 Nuclear encoded genes in red The main function of mitochondria is oxidative phosphorylation A process used to generate ATP (adenosine triphosphate) The genetic material in mitochondria is referred to as mtDNA The human mtDNA consists of only 17,000 bp (Figure 7.14) ATP is used as an energy source to drive cellular reactions It carries relatively few genes rRNA and tRNA genes 13 genes that function in oxidative phosphorylation Note: Most mitochondrial proteins are encoded by genes in the nucleus These proteins are made in the cytoplasm, then transported into the mitochondria Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-58 Necessary for synthesis of proteins inside the mitochondrion Function in oxidative phosphorylation Figure 7.14 7-59 The main function of chloroplasts is photosynthesis The genetic material in chloroplasts is referred to as cpDNA The cpDNA of tobacco plant consists of 156,000 bp It is typically about 10 times larger than the mitochondrial genome of animal cells It carries between 110 and 120 different genes rRNA and tRNA genes Many genes that are required for photosynthesis As with mitochondria, many chloroplast proteins are encoded by genes in the nucleus These proteins contain chloroplast-targeting signals that direct them from the cytoplasm into the chloroplast Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-60 Genes designated ORF (open reading frame) encode polypeptides with unknown functions Figure 7.15 A genetic map of the tobacco chloroplast genome 7-61 Maternal Inheritance in the Fouro’clock Plant Carl Correns discovered that pigmentation in Mirabilis jalapa (the four o’clock plant) shows a nonMendelian pattern of inheritance Leaves could be green, white or variegated (with both green and white sectors) Correns determined that the pigmentation of the offspring depended solely on the maternal parent and not at all on the paternal parent This is termed maternal inheritance Refer to Figure 7.16 Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-62 Figure 7.16 Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-63 In this example, maternal inheritance occurs because the chloroplasts are transmitted only through the cytoplasm of the egg The pollen grains do not transmit chloroplasts to the offspring The phenotype of leaves can be explained by the types of chloroplasts found in leaf cells Green phenotype is the wild-type White phenotype is the mutant Due to normal chloroplasts that can make green pigment Due to a mutation that prevents the synthesis of the green pigment A cell can contain both types of chloroplasts A condition termed heteroplasmy In this case, the leaf would be green Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-64 Figure 7.17 provides a cellular explanation for the variegated phenotype in Mirabilis jalapa Consider a fertilized egg that inherited two types of chloroplast Green and white As the plant grows, the chloroplasts are irregularly distributed to daughter cells Sometimes, a cell may receive only white chloroplasts Such a cell will continue to divide and produce a white sector Cells that contain only green chloroplasts or a combination of green and white will ultimately produce green sectors Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-65 Figure 7.17 Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-66 Maternal (cytoplasmic) inheritance The Petite Trait in Yeast Mutations that yield defective mitochondria are expected to make cells grow much more slowly Boris Ephrussi and his colleagues identified Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutants that have such a phenotype These were called petites because they formed small colonies on agar plates Wild-type strains formed larger colonies Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-67 Biochemical and physiological evidence indicated that petite mutants had defective mitochondria Genetic analyses showed that petite mutants are inherited in different ways Two main types of mutants were identified 1. Segregational mutants Have mutations in genes located in the nucleus Segregate in a Mendelian manner in meiosis Refer to Figure 7.18a 2. Vegetative mutants Have mutations in genes located in the mitochondrial genome Show a non-Mendelian pattern of inheritance Refer to Figure 7.18b Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-68 Yeast come in two mating types: a and a Thus, Euphressi was able to cross yeast belonging to two different strains Segregational mutant •Nuclear and mendelian Zygote then meiosis Each resulting tetrad shows a 2:2 ratio of wild-type to petite This result is typical of Mendelian inheritance Figure 7.18 Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-69 Euphressi discovered two types of vegetative petites Neutral and Suppressive Zygote then Each resulting tetrad shows a 4:0 ratio of wild-type to petite meiosis Zygote then These results contradict the normal 2:2 ratio expected for the segregation of Mendelian traits meiosis Each resulting tetrad shows a 0:4 ratio of wild-type to petite Figure 7.18 Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-70 Blue and red indicate mendelian segregation of nuclear genes Researchers later found that Neutral petites lack most of their mitochondrial DNA Suppressive petites lack only small segments of mtDNA When two yeast cells are mated, offspring inherit mitochondria from both parents Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-71 Figure 7.18 Progeny have both “wild type” and “neutral petite” mitochondria They display a normal phenotype because of the wild type mitochondria Progeny have both “wild type” and “suppressive petite” mitochondria So how come only petite colonies are produced? Two possibilities i. Suppressive petite mitochondria could replicate faster than wild-type mitochondria ii. Recombination between wild-type and petite mtDNA may ultimately produce defects in the wild-type mitochondria Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-72 Inheritance of Chloroplasts in Algae The unicellular alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is a model organism It contains a single chloroplast Occupies ~ 40% of the cell’s volume Most strains are sensitive to the antibiotic streptomycin (sms) In 1954, Ruth Sager identified a mutant that was resistant to streptomycin (smr) Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-73 Like yeast, Chlamydomonas can be found in two mating types Mating type is due to nuclear inheritance It segregates in a 1:1 manner Sager and her colleagues discovered that “resistance to streptomycin” was not inherited in a Mendelian manner mt+ and mt– smr was inherited from the mt+ parent but not from the mt– parent In subsequent studies, they mapped several genes, including the smr gene, to the chloroplast chromosome Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-74 Because the mt+ strain was smr Figure 7.19 Because the mt+ strain was sms 7-75 The Pattern of Inheritance of Organelles The pattern of inheritance of mitochondria and chloroplasts varies among different species Heterogamous species Produce two kinds of gametes Female gamete Large Provides most of the cytoplasm of the zygote Male gamete Small Provides little more than a nucleus In these species, organelles are typically inherited from the mother Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-76 7-77 The Pattern of Inheritance of Organelles Species with maternal inheritance may, on occasion, exhibit paternal leakage The paternal parent provides mitochondria through the sperm In the mouse, for example, 1-4 paternal mitochondria are inherited for every 100,000 maternal mitochondria per generation of offspring Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-78 Human Mitochondrial Diseases Human mtDNA is transmitted from mother to offspring via the cytoplasm of the egg Several human mitochondrial diseases have been discovered These are typically chronic degenerative disorders affecting the brain, heart, muscles, kidneys and endocrine glands Example: Leber’s hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) Affects the optic nerve May lead to progressive loss of vision in one or both eyes LHON is caused by mutations in several different mitochondrial genes Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-79 MATERNAL INHERITANCE OF MITOCHONDRIAL DNA MUTATIONS The Endosymbiosis Theory The endosymbiosis theory describes the evolutionary origin of mitochondria and chloroplasts These organelles originated when bacteria took up residence within a primordial eukaryotic cell During evolution, the characteristic of the intracellular bacterial cell gradually changed to that of the organelle The endosymbiotic origin of organelles is supported by several observations These include Organelles have circular chromosomes (like bacteria) Organelle genes are more similar to bacterial genes than to those found within the nucleus Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-80 The eukaryotic cell was now able to undergo phtosynthesis Figure 7.20 The eukaryotic cell was now able to synthesize greater amounts of ATP Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-81 The Endosymbiosis Theory During the evolution of eukaryotic species, most genes originally found in the bacterial genome have been lost or transferred to the nucleus The gene transfer has primarily been unidirectional From the organelles to the nucleus In addition, gene transfer can occur between organelles Modern day mitochondria and chloroplasts have lost most of the genes still found in present-day cyanobacteria and purple bacteria Between two mitochondria, two chloroplasts or a mitochondrion and a chloroplast The biological benefits of gene transfer remain unclear Copyright ©The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display 7-82